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Barouche vs Chariot - What's the difference?

barouche | chariot |

As nouns the difference between barouche and chariot

is that barouche is (vehicles) four-wheeled horse-drawn carriage with collapsible half-hood, two double seats facing each other, and an outside seat for the driver while chariot is a two-wheeled, horse-drawn vehicle, used in bronze age and early iron age warfare.

barouche

Noun

(en noun)
  • (vehicles) Four-wheeled horse-drawn carriage with collapsible half-hood, two double seats facing each other, and an outside seat for the driver.
  • * 1919 , , Duckworth, hardback edition, page 3:
  • Day was drooping on a fine evening in March as a brown barouche passed through the wrought-iron gates of Hare-Hatch House on to the open highway.
  • * 1969 , New York, Charles Scribner's Sons, page 288:
  • "Of course I was eager to put her affairs in order," George told my father, "but I found it a bit thick when expected to pay for Lord Randolph Churchill's barouche purchased in the ' 80s."

    chariot

    Noun

    (en noun)
  • a two-wheeled, horse-drawn vehicle, used in Bronze Age and Early Iron Age warfare
  • a light four-wheeled carriage used for ceremonial or pleasure purposes
  • Anagrams

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